A cyclist has died several weeks after a crash. Emergency services were called to the crash on Rhubarb Bridge, near Lincoln Road in Peterborough, at around 6.45pm on February 21.
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The crash involved a cyclist and no other vehicles. The cyclist, a 49-year-old man from Peterborough, was taken to hospital in a critical condition.
He sadly died on March 9. A police spokesperson said: “Officers and paramedics were called to Rhubarb Bridge, near Lincoln Road, at about 6.45pm on February 21.
“A 49-year-old man from Peterborough was taken to hospital in a critical condition and later died on 9 March. No other vehicles were involved.”
Cambridgeshire Police is appealing for information. Anyone with information should call police on 101 or report it online and quote incident 444 of February 21.
Katie Bradsell turned multiple offers for a lift home
A hairdresser has been banned from getting behind the wheel after she drove herself home following a seven hour binge.
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Katie Bradsell, 35, had been drinking at her local pub and had refused multiple lift homes from regulars as well as bar staff. She instead decided to make the 1.1 mile trip home in her Audi, telling the landlady: “It’s only down the road.”
The landlady called police, who went to Bradsell’s home where they found her car parked in her driveway.
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Bradsell answered the door but refused to take a breathalyser test and instead kicked out at a PC as she was escorted to a patrol car, where she also kicked the vehicles door into another officer multiple times. Neither officer was injured during the assaults.
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Inquiries revealed Bradsell was notorious amongst neighbours for bouts of drunkenness and anti social behaviour on their cul-de-sac.
In 2023, she was convicted of racially aggravated harassment after she branded a mixed race neighbour as a “fat smelly sweaty p***” and an ”ugly c..nt’ during an argument outside their respective houses in a row of terraces. She also had a conviction for assault on an emergency worker in 2020.
At Chester magistrates court, Bradsell pleaded guilty to failing to provide a sample of breath for analysis and to two charges of assault on an emergency worker.
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She was ordered to complete 20 rehabilitation activity days and a three month alcohol treatment programme as part of a 12 month community order. She was also ordered to pay each of the officers £75 in compensation was banned from driving for 20 months and ordered to pay £199 in costs and a surcharge.
Bradsell refused a lift
The incident occurred on January 7 this year after Bradsell, of Willow Hey, Saughall, Chester, had attended the Saughall Arms pub during the mid afternoon and then stayed into the evening, where staff were hosting their regular Wednesday quiz night for the regulars.
Miss Lisa McGuire, prosecuting, said: “Miss Bradsell was there from about 3pm drinking alcohol and by 10.10pm, Ms Summers the publican believed the defendant had consumed about eight pints of lager and a shot of alcohol.
”Miss Bradsell then indicated her intention to leave in her car – even though she is intoxicated. A few people around her say ‘We will give you a lift home.”
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”There was then a conversation between [the landlady] and Miss Bradsell about driving but Miss Bradsell was determined to drive home, stating ‘it’s only down the road’. She then jumped into her vehicle which caused concern and due to the level of intoxication the landlady made a report to police.
“Police attended at the defendant’s address where she was requested to provide a sample. She refused to provide a sample and became confrontational with the attending officers. That culminated in kicking out at the officers and making contact with their legs. No significant injuries were sustained by the officers. ”
In mitigation for Bradsell, defence solicitor Catherine Higham said: ”She has had significant issues with mental health and has been using alcohol to cope with issues that she has encountered. She is medicated to some extent but was still struggling to obtain the assistance from her GP. ”
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In sentencing District Judge Jack McGarva told Bradsell: ”It is clear that there are issues that have gone on in your life making it very difficult for you to cope – though having a massive amount of alcohol does not help that at all.
“For people with anxiety and depression alcohol is probably the worst thing you can use. It is a depressant and after a high there is a massive low. It is not a great thing. ”
There have been two signs in the aftermath of the Italy defeat to suggest Borthwick may be running out of time. Within hours of the final whistle in Rome, a leading bookmaker sent round the odds for the candidates to replace him. Ronan O’Gara was the favourite, the former Ireland fly-half who has overseen great success at La Rochelle winning two European Cups, even with La Rochelle currently in the middle of their worst season for some time. Andy Farrell, the Ireland head coach, was also listed on there, although there is a better chance of pigs taking flight.
North Yorkshire Police is appealing for information and sightings to help locate 28-year-old Ryan Rudd after he failed to return home or to his barracks in Catterick Garrison when expected after a night out with friends last month.
As reported by The Press last week, he was reported missing to police on March 1 after being out of contact with family, friends and colleagues – who were concerned for his safety.
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The last confirmed sighting of Ryan at 2.54am on February 15, walking past the Old Flour Factory towards New Millgate in Selby.
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He is described as white, around 5ft 8in, of slim build with dark brown hair, and when he was last seen he was wearing a black t-shirt, blue hooded top and black trousers.
CCTV images taken on the day that Ryan was last seen (Image: North Yorkshire Police)
Ryan’s Mum Kerstin and Dad Ken have today released a new image of Ryan along with this statement: “As a family, we are devastated and struggling to put into words how we feel.
“We would ask anyone who has even the smallest piece of information that could help bring Ryan home to please contact the police. We are desperate to have him back.”
Inspector Ciaran Conlon from North Yorkshire Police said: “This is an extremely difficult time for Ryan’s family, and they are currently receiving support from specialist officers.
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Ryan’s family are receiving support from specialist officers. (Image: North Yorkshire Police)
“As with any investigation, we remain open minded and will continue to explore all lines of enquiry, but we must accept the possibility that Ryan has entered the River Ouse.
“If you do have any information which can help with the search then please call us 101. Any immediate sightings should be reported to 999.”
On St Patrick’s Thursday at Prestbury Park, Heart Wood triumphed over Jonbon in the Ryanair Chase to give Henry de Bromhead his first winner of this year’s Festival.
33/1 shot Home By The Lee won the Stayers’ Hurdle at the fifth time of asking for Joseph O’Brien, while there was a first Cheltenham win for Jimmy Fyffe as favourite Supremely West triumphed in the Pertemps Network Hurdle final.
40/1 shot White Noise sprung a shock in the opening Mares’ Novices’ Hurdle before Meetmebythesea won the Jack Richards Novices’ Limited Handicap Chase, Wodhooh delivered in the Close Brothers Mares’ Hurdle and Ask Brewster brought home the Fulke Walwyn Kim Muir Challenge Cup.
When is Cheltenham Festival 2026?
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The meeting runs for four days, beginning on Tuesday, March 10, 2026, and running until Friday, March 13.
There are seven races each day at Prestbury Park, with the first at 1.20pm GMT and the last at 5.20pm.
Cheltenham Festival 2026 race card and results
GG
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Gold Cup Day (Friday, March 13)
14.00: County Handicap Hurdle
14.40: Mrs Paddy Power Mares’ Steeple Chase
15.20: Albert Bartlett Novices’ Hurdle
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16.00: Cheltenham Gold Cup
16.40: Festival Hunters Chase
17.20: Martin Pipe Conditional Jockeys Handicap Hurdle
The Cheltenham Roar heard coming around the bend
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Champion Day (Tuesday, March 10) results
13.20: Supreme Novices’ Hurdle
Old Park Star 15/8f
Sober Glory 9/2
Mydaddypaddy 6/1
14.00: Arkle Novices’ Chase
Kargese 7/1
Kopek Des Bordes 11/8
Lulamba 11/10f
14.40: Handicap Steeple Chase
Saratoga 10/1
Winston Junior 5/1
Klycot 40/1
Pourquoi Pas Papa 16/1
Johnnywho 18/1
Jagwar 3/1f
Quebecois 10/1
Blow Your Wad 14/1
Lossiemouth 7/5f
Brighterdaysahead 7/2
The New Lion 3/1
16.40: Juvenile Handicap Hurdle
Madara 3/1f
Will The Wise 10/1
Moon D’orange 25/1
Downmexicoway 9/1
17.20: National Hunt Novices’ Chase
Holloway Queen 12/1
King Of Answers 22/1
One Big Bang 11/1
Union Station 28/1
Ladies’ Day (Wednesday, March 11) results
13.20: Turners Novices’ Hurdle
King Rasko Grey 11/1
Act Of Innocence 10/1
Zeus Power 50/1
Soldier Reeves 150/1
14.00: Brown Advisory Novices’ Chase
Kitzbuhel 11/1
Final Demand 7/2
Salver 25/1
Oscars Brother 18/1
Jingko Blue 9/2f
Franciscan Rock 50/1
Storm Heart 5/1
Ballyadam 40/1
Beckett Rock 33/1
15.20: Cross Country Steeple Chase
Final Orders 7/1
Favori De Champdou 2/1f
Vanillier 13/2
16.00: Queen Mother Steeple Chase
Il Etait Temps 5/2
Libberty Hunter 50/1
L’eau Du Sud 13/2
16.40: Grand Annual Steeple Chase Challenge Cup
Martator 66/1
Jazzy Matty 8/1
Break My Soul 20/1
Release The Beast 10/1
The Mourne Rambler 15/2
Mets Ta Ceinture 14/1
Bass Hunter 8/1
St Patrick’s (Thursday, March 12) results
13.20: Mares’ Novices’ Hurdle
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White Noise 40/1
Oldschool Outlaw 15/2
Place De La Nation 28/1
14.00: Jack Richards Novices’ Limited Handicap Chase
Meetmebythesea 9/1
Gold Dancer 25/1
Regent’s Stroll 5/1
14.40: Close Brothers Mares’ Hurdle
Wodhooh 5/6f
Jade de Grugy 2/1
Feet Of A Dancer 8/1
15.20: Paddy Power Stayers’ Hurdle
Home By The Lee 33/1
Ballyburn 11/2
Bob Olinger 13/2
Heart Wood 9/2
Jonbon 2/1f
Banbridge 3/1
16.40: Pertemps Network Final Handicap Hurdle
Supremely West 10/3
Lavida Adiva 22/1
Ikarak 40/1
17.20: Fulke Walwyn Kim Muir Challenge Cup
Ask Brewster 22/1
Road To Home 9/1
Monbeg Genius 18/1
Cheltenham Festival 2026 weather and going
Light rain is forecast throughout the day at Cheltenham on Friday, though the wind has calmed and there should be some sunny intervals.
However, it has turned much colder, with a highest temperature forecast of around eight degrees.
The going for Friday on the chase course is good to soft and soft in places, while it’s soft and good to soft in places on the hurdle course.
How to watch Cheltenham Festival 2026
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TV channel: ITV1 will broadcast the first six races for FREE, with coverage beginning at 12.45pm every day and running until 5pm.
Preview show ‘The Opening Show’ will be broadcast on ITV4 from 9am to 10am every morning of the meet.
The only place to watch the Festival in its entirety is on Racing TV, which will broadcast all seven races on each day of the meeting. Build-up coverage starts at 12.45pm GMT every day and coverage concludes after the final race. Racing TV is a subscription-based channel available through Sky.
Live stream: TV viewers can watch the action for free via the ITVX website and app. Racing TV is available across Android TV, Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, and their own website and app.
Everything we know as major fire breaks out at Bolton industrial estate – Manchester Evening News
Need to know
Crews have spent hours at the scene
Firefighters battle a large fire at Raikes Clough Industrial Estate, Bolton(Image: Manchester Evening News / Sean Hansford)
Everything we know as major fire breaks out at Bolton industrial estate:
A major fire has broken out on a Bolton industrial estate. Emergency services were called out to Raikes Clough Industrial Estate at 2.30am this morning (March 13).
Six fire engines were sent out to the scene, alongside an aerial appliance and a high-volume pump. Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service said the fire involved a large pile of scrap metal which was ‘well alight’ as crews arrived.
The incident is understood to have taken place at Lloyds Metal. Crews worked throughout the morning to bring the fire under control, with damping down ongoing at the scene.
No one is believed to have been injured in the blaze. An investigation into the cause of the fire is due to take place.
Heavy, acrid smoke is billowing from the site this morning. Residents are being urged to keep their windows and doors closed.
Greater Manchester Police, the Environment Agency and Bolton Council are also working on the incident. Raikes Lane remains closed while crews work at the scene. Read the full story here.
Court documents show less than two years after Mohamed Bailor Jalloh was released from prison for attempting to aid the Islamic State, he opened fire in a classroom at Virginia’s Old Dominion University on Thursday before ROTC students subdued and killed him.
The shooting that left one person dead and another two injured has raised questions about why Jalloh, who the FBI identified as the gunman, was imprisoned and the conditions of his release — with some elected officials questioning how someone with known ties to the Islamic State was able to carry out such an attack.
“The horrific tragedy that occurred today on ODU’s campus never should have happened,” U.S. Rep. Jen Kiggans, who represents the congressional district neighboring the university, wrote on Facebook.
After Jalloh pleaded guilty in October 2016 to providing material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization — the Islamic State group — a federal judge sentenced him in 2017 to an 11-year prison term with credit for time served retroactive to his July 2016 arrest.
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Jalloh was released from federal custody Dec. 23, 2024. It wasn’t immediately clear why his release from prison was moved up. Inmates can get time off of their sentences for a variety of reasons, but it isn’t known if that happened in this case.
He was on supervised release, which is comparable to probation, when he carried out the attack on Thursday. Based on his release date, that would’ve run into 2029.
Confessions to undercover agents
Jalloh’s October 2016 plea came after a three-month sting operation in which he, then 26, confessed to an undercover FBI agent that he was thinking about carrying out an attack similar to the 2009 shootings at Fort Hood, which left 13 people dead. Authorities launched the 2016 operation after Jalloh made contact with Islamic State members in Africa earlier that year.
Jalloh later told the informant that the Islamic State group had asked if he wanted to participate in an attack. He tried to donate $500 to the group, but the money actually went to an account controlled by the FBI, according to court documents.
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Jalloh then tried to buy an AR-15 assault rifle from a Virginia gun store but was turned away because he lacked the proper paperwork. The affidavit says he returned the next day and bought a different assault rifle. Prosecutors said the rifle was rendered inoperable before Jalloh left the store, unbeknownst to Jalloh. He was arrested the following day.
Debate over sentencing
The Justice Department in 2017 requested a 20-year prison sentence for Jalloh, noting that he had made multiple attempts to join the Islamic State and had attempted to acquire a gun to carry out a murder plot.
“The defendant was fully aware of what he was doing, and the consequences of those actions. His only misgivings seemed to be a fear that he would waver at the critical moment,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum.
They added: “By putting the idea of this murder plot into religious terms, and by suggesting that murdering members of the US military would be a path to heaven, the defendant showed how strongly committed he was to the deadly ideology” of the Islamic State.
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Jalloh’s lawyers asked for a sentence of 6½ years in prison and requested that he be placed in a facility that provides residential drug treatment for inmates with addiction and substance abuse issues.
U.S. District Judge Liam O’Grady, an appointee of former President George W. Bush, sentenced him instead to 11 years in prison.
The judge also ordered Jalloh to participate in a program for substance abuse testing and treatment and mental health treatment, and requested that he be evaluated for the federal prison system’s residential drug program.
Completing the Residential Drug Abuse Program can reduce an inmate’s prison sentence by up to a year, according to the federal Bureau of Prisons. It wasn’t immediately clear if Jalloh qualified for the program. Normally, inmates serving sentences for terrorism-related offenses aren’t eligible.
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In addition, some inmates who stay out of trouble in prison can reduce their sentence by earning up to 54 days of good conduct time credit for each year of their sentence. However, under the 2018 prison reform law known as the First Step Act, inmates convicted of terrorism-related offenses are not eligible for such credit.
Troubled shooter lured by radical cleric
Little is publicly known about Jalloh, who was a naturalized citizen from Sierra Leone. But court documents depict him as a troubled man who was radicalized by Anwar al-Awlaki, a well-known American imam who became an al-Qaida propagandist.
The Virginia Army National Guard confirmed he served as a specialist from 2009 until 2015, when he was honorably discharged. Jalloh told a government informant he quit the National Guard after hearing lectures from al-Awlaki, according to a 2016 FBI affidavit filed in his criminal case.
In a letter to the federal judge that presided over his sentencing, Jalloh wrote: “I feel deep regret in having been driven by my emotions rather than my intellect and becoming involved with such an evil organization. … I reject and deplore terrorism and any groups associated with it, especially ISIL.”
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He wrote that he started using drugs after his girlfriend ended their six-year relationship.
“The pain I felt internally was unbearable, and drugs and alcohol were the only things that took that pain away,” Jalloh wrote. “I started doing marijuana, coke and mushrooms using one of them at least on a daily basis in order to kill the pain I was in and to fill in the void I felt internally.”
The letter itself remains under seal, but his lawyer included excerpts of it in his sentencing memorandum.
George Russell and Kimi Antonelli annihilated the opposition in the one and only practice session ahead of Sunday’s Chinese Grand Prix, suggesting Mercedes will be as dominant here in Shanghai as they were in Melbourne last weekend.
There is now no time for teams to refine their setups before the first competitive session of the weekend, qualifying for Saturday’s sprint race, which takes place at 7.30am UK time.
Russell pipped team-mate Antonelli by 0.120sec in cool, sunny conditions in Shanghai on Friday morning. But the championship leader was a massive 0.545sec clear of the first driver not in a Mercedes, McLaren’s Lando Norris.
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McLaren’s Oscr Piastri and then Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc were next fastest, with Ferrari’s much-anticipated “Macarena” rear wing, which flips upside-down, not immediately flipping the script.
Lewis Hamilton was sixth fastest in the second Ferrari, 1.388sec off the pace, although the seven-time world champion did set his time earlier in the session on older tyres after an early spin wrecked his set of medium tyres.
Elsewhere, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was down in eighth place, a massive 1.8secs off the pace of Mercedes, and behind the Haas of Briton Oliver Bearman.
It remains to be seen whether anyone can challenge Mercedes this weekend, although the start to both the sprint race and Sunday’s main grand prix could offer opportunities.
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Last week’s start in Melbourne was chaotic with some drivers depleting their battery reserves on their formation laps – Alpine’s Franco Colapinto narrowly avoided crashing into Racing Bulls’ Liam Lawson as a result.
In the wake of safety fears voiced by drivers, the FIA allowed extra practice starts at the end of Friday’s FP1 session, although F1’s governing body stopped short of altering the formation lap recharge limit which had been highlighted as a problem by Russell.
On Thursday, Russell called Ferrari “selfish” for blocking the proposed change due to the fact they currently have the best start of any team.
Amanda Meadowcroft and Bradley Couzins have both been jailed
A mother and son have been sentenced for smuggling 14kg worth of cocaine to Manchester Airport.
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Border force stopped Amanda Meadowcroft, 53, and her friend at Manchester Airport on April 22 last year after they returned from a holiday to Punta Canta, in the Dominican Republic.
Meadowcroft’s friend was asked by officers if she packed her two suitcases herself. She said she had packed the blue suitcase but that the black bag was packed by Meadowcroft’s son, Bradley Couzins, 34, who had also paid for her return ticket, Manchester Crown Court heard during a sentencing hearing on Thursday (March 12).
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The black bag was searched, and nine packages of cocaine were found wrapped in brown wrapping. Five other packages were then also found and wrapped in the same way in the blue bag.
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Meadowcroft was later found at the airport by officers, and claimed she had been on a one week holiday to the Dominican Republic which she had won through Facebook.
Her luggage was searched but no further drugs found, however officers did seize the defendant’s mobile phone and found text messages between Meadowcroft and Couzins, where they discussed how to smuggle the drugs back into the country. The court heard how Couzins was the mastermind.
In the messages, Couzins discussed with Meadowcroft, of Argyle Street Darwen, Lancashire, where she would go and whether she would be travelling business or standard class. He also organised their tickets, passports, and transport from the airport.
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After his mother and friend were arrested, Couzins was arrested at a later date on August 7, where he was also charged with assault of an emergency worker after he attempted to smash his phone out of an National Crime Agency officer’s hand and in doing so caused a “deep cut” on her finger, the court heard.
Prosecutors told the court how after all 14 packages were inspected, they were found to “contain mostly cutting agents”, meaning it was not “pure cocaine” which they believed to have been smuggling into the country. Christopher Green, an expert witness, said that if the drugs were of a high quality, they were worth up to £294,000.
A judge told the pair they had been ‘duped’.
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‘This criminal family went to great lengths’
The court heard how Couzins, of Gillibrand Street Darwen, Lancashire, has 25 previous convictions, and Meadowcroft has 49 with one similar offending case in which she smuggled around 30kg of cannabis and received a 10 month suspended sentence.
Kristian Cavanagh, defending Couzins, said the defendant recognised it was a “stupid decision” and believed that he had shown genuine remorse. While in custody, Couzins saw a trauma therapist with Mr Cavanagh adding that he “engaged in all courses”.
He told the court Couzins wanted to live a “law-abiding” life, and that having a son of his own added to this motivation.
Amber Weir, defending Meadowcroft, said how there was a “degree of intimidation” from Couzins, and, in a letter Her Honour Judge Manley received before the sentencing, Meadowcroft said that she was “scared” of Couzins and that he could be “violent”.
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Weir added Meadowcroft felt “ashamed” and noted her past issues with “drug dependency” has led her feeling “genuine shame” for contributing to that drug cycle.
At the time she was serving a suspended sentence for a previous smuggling conviction.
Meadowcroft has two other children, 25 and 28, as well as being a grandmother and is “motivated to be a productive member of society”, the court was told. Both pleaded guilty to fraudulent evasion of a prohibition by bringing into or taking out of the UK a controlled drug.
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Sentencing, Judge Hilary Mandley said: “The facts are simple, you flew from the Dominican Republic to Manchester with luggage that contained cocaine. It was of low purity, and it appeared you had been duped. The fact that the cocaine was of low purity is neither here nor there. I will temper [your sentence] to a degree to reflect that purity was low.”
A teary Meadowcroft apologised as she was sentenced to seven years imprisonment, whereas Couzins was sentenced to seven years and six months imprisonment.
Charles Lee, NCA Senior Investigation Officer, said: “This criminal family went to great lengths to source and smuggle class A drugs into the UK. The duo planned and executed an operation born out of greed, culminating in a violent assault on an NCA officer. Thankfully the officer made a full recovery.
“Alongside key partners such as Border Force and Lancashire Police, the NCA will continue to disrupt supply chains and bring criminals like Meadowcroft and Couzins to justice.”
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The woman arrested alongside Meadowcroft was initially charged but subsequently released with no further action.
The Department for Communities released advice on Friday
Details of payment dates for benefits over the St Patrick’s Day bank holiday have been announced.
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Over the March Bank Holiday period, March 17 2026, the Department for Communities has said that benefits recipients in Northern Ireland will still be paid by this date.
All benefits are paid on different dates, however, recipients should not receive payments later than the day it is typically due.
A Department for Communities spokesperson said: “Benefit Payment Dates – March Public Holiday. If your payment is due on 17 March, you will still be paid by that date.
“All benefits operate on different payment systems but you will not receive your payment later than the day it would normally be due.”
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For more information, go to the Department for Communities website here.
One certified baddie that’s apparently managed to escape the chopping block, though, is Mal Roper (Tim Treloar), a slimy, insidious stalker, who’s obsession with Bernie Winter (Jane Hazlegrove) is as grotesque as it is unwanted…and is set to get a lot worse.
Metro understands that an upcoming storyline twist will see Mal use his knowledge of Bernie’s son, Kit Green’s (Jacob Roberts) violent attack on him to his advantage.
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In order to keep quiet over who put him in hospital, Mal will make it clear that the only way he’ll keep his mouth shut is if Bernie has sex with him, leaving Bernie with a hideous decision to make; spend the night with a man who’s tortured her and cheat on her beloved husband, Dev Alahan (Jimmi Harkishin), or risk Mal destroying Kit’s life.
Mal’s stalking of Bernie so far
While Mal initially appeared friendly, his dark side quickly became apparent (Picture: Danielle Baguley/ITV)
Preying on Bernie when she was at her lowest ebb, following the loss of her son, Paul Foreman’s (Peter Ash) true love, Billy Mayhew (Daniel Brocklebank), Mal found her in a seriously inebriated state and spent a drug-fuelled night with her. Despite refusing to cheat, Bernie’s relapse left her riddled with guilt and terrified that Dev would find out.
Bernie made it perfectly clear to Mal, she wanted absolutely nothing further to do with him and he was to leave her alone…
…except, he didn’t.
Preying on Roy Cropper (David Neilson) and taking on an ever-lengthening job re-wiring his café, Mal has place himself as close to Bernie as possible, while standing outside of her house in the middle of the night, with things reaching a violent crescendo when he locked himself in the cafe alongside her.
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Despite Bernie’s protestations that he leave, Mal was completely undeterred, launching into a desperate monologue about his inability to stop thinking about her, chillingly referring to her as ‘my Bernie’.
When Bernie reminded him that she wasn’t his and was married to Dev, Mal darkened further, accusing her of being a ‘cheap tease’ and gripping her wrist when she tried to escape up to the flat…
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…enter Kit, who only earlier, Bernie had opened up to and informed just how terrifying Mal was becoming. Kit battered Mal, triggering a heart attack and landing him a bed at Weatherfield General. While Bernie was initially arrested for the attack, she was released and headed straight for her dodgy-copper son, who confessed to the assault.
Though Bernie was horrified at Kit’s actions, she understood his reasoning. Fleeing to Tenerife for a holiday with Dev, she pled with Kit to keep out of trouble while she was away. While he agreed, one thing neither of them banked on?
Mal and Kit come face to face (Picture: Danielle Baguley/ITV)
Next week sees Kit become aware that a witness to the attack has come forward, forcing him to think on his feet and attempt to shut the new threat to his secret down, though he’s shaken even further to learn that Mal himself has regained consciousness…
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…and judging by what’s to come, it’s clear that he either remembers, or quickly learns who attacked him.